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AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY IN LATIN AMERICA (1945-1975): THE CONTAINMENT POLICY AND THE PERCEPTIONS OF “THREAT”
by
Benjamin Aaron Reed
Bachelor of Philosophy, University of Pittsburgh, 2011
Submitted to the Undergraduate Faculty of
The University of Pittsburgh’s Political Science Department in partial fulfillment
of the requirements for the degree of
Bachelor of Philosophy
University of Pittsburgh
2011
2
UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH
University Honors College
This thesis was presented
by
Benjamin Aaron Reed
It was defended on
Dec 2, 2011
and approved by
Jonathan Harris, PhD, Professor, Political Science, University of Pittsburgh
John Soluri, PhD, Associate Professor, History, Carnegie Mellon University
Thesis Director: Scott Morgenstern, PhD, Associate Professor, Political Science, University
of Pittsburgh
3
Copyright © by Benjamin Reed
2011
4
This paper analyzes the U.S. foreign policy of containment as it was applied to Latin and South
America, from 1945 through the 1970s, which U.S. policy makers employed to prevent the
spread of “communism.” The containment policy defines communism as the most significant
threat to U.S. interests: a threat that directed policy theory and catalyzed policy action. That is,
when a situation was deemed a “communist threat,” U.S. policy makers responded through a
variety of options including, but not limited to, the use of covert intervention (such as the
orchestration of military coups to unseat supposed communist leaders), of economic reprisals
(such as the removal of U.S. economic aid to a given country), and even of military force. But,
through my study of the containment policy, I realize that the way U.S. policy makers
characterized a “communist threat” was not always consistent, for they did not always react to
similar circumstances in similar ways. I contend that how U.S. policy makers viewed world
events, that is, how they judged and perceived those events (for example, land reform in a given
country) was not always congruent from situation to situation. In this light, the purpose of this
paper, then, is to explain why this discrepancy in perception occurred, and therefore to explain
the evolution of American foreign policy and action from the late 1940s through the early 1970s.
First, I contend that U.S. policy perspective (a term I coined to describe how U.S. policy
makers judged world events) and U.S. foreign policy evolved from 1945 through the 1970s,
AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY IN LATIN AMERICA (1945-1975): THE CONTAINMENT POLICY AND THE PERCEPTIONS OF “THREAT”
Benjamin Reed, Bachelor of Philosophy
University of Pittsburgh, 2011
5
causing U.S. policy makers to define threats in different ways across time. In layman’s terms,
U.S. policy makers were not as anti-communist by the 1970s, which caused them to be less
critical, and perhaps more practical, when judging a situation to be a “communist threat.”
Second, I will argue that whether or not a regime was democratic or dictatorial was significant,
in that U.S. policy makers favored dictatorial regimes as the best defense against “communist
threats” in the Western hemisphere. As a result, U.S. policy makers were more sensitive to
“communist threats” in democratic regimes and more likely to investigate such regimes with
greater scrutiny for the possibility of these threats.
6
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1.0 INTRODUCTION: THE PUZZLE .......................................................................... 13
1.1 SOLVING THE PUZZLE: ............................................................................... 16
1.2 HOW FOREIGN POLICY AND POLICY PERSPECTIVE EVOLVED: .. 19
1.3 HOW THE CASE OF ALLENDE THREATENS MY THESIS AND WHY
THE THREAT CAN BE DISPELLED: ........................................................................... 22
1.4 THESIS 2: ........................................................................................................... 24
1.5 ALTERNATIVE THESIS: ............................................................................... 25
1.6 HOW THE PAPER WILL PROCEED ........................................................... 34
2.0 CHAPTER 1: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE OF THE CONTAINMENT
POLICY: EVOLUTION OF FOREIGN POLICY AND FOREIGN POLICY
PERSPECTIVE........................................................................................................................... 36
2.1 THE COLD WAR BEGINS: ............................................................................ 36
2.2 INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL CONTEXT (LATE 1940S AND EARLY
1950S): ............................................................................................................................. 38
2.3 CONTAINMENT: THE BEGINNING ........................................................... 41
2.4 THE VAGUE AND ABSTRACT NATURE OF KENNAN’S POLICY
RECOMMENDATIONS: .................................................................................................. 42
7
2.5 U.S. POLICY MAKERS AND THE AMERICA PUBLIC’S PERSPECTIVE
OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: LEGAL-MORALISM: ................................... 43
2.6 IMPLICATIONS OF THE LEGAL-MORALISTIC PERSPECTIVE: ...... 45
2.7 AN ANTI-COMMUNIST LIBERAL-CONSERVATISM CONSENSUS
AND A DEFINING OF KENNAN’S ORIGINAL POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS: .
............................................................................................................................. 46
2.8 THE ANTI-COMMUNIST DEMOCRATS: .................................................. 47
2.9 THE CONTAINMENT POLICY IN ACTION AND THE FURTHER
DEFINING OF THE “COMMUNIST THREAT”: THE TRUMAN DOCTRINE. .... 48
2.10 ANOTHER DOSE OF KENNAN’S CONTAINMENT THEORY: ............. 50
2.11 FURTHER ACTION IN THE NAME OF CONTAINMENT: BUILDING
U.S. DEFENSES AND “MAKING FRIENDS.” .............................................................. 51
2.12 THE BEGINNING OF THE DOMESTIC PURGE OF COMMUNISM. ... 52
2.13 NSC-68: FURTHER DEFINING THE “COMMUNIST THREAT”: .......... 55
2.14 U.S. PRESIDENTS AGREE WITH NSC-68: “UNIVERSAL
CONCEPTIONS OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS” AT THE HIGHEST
LEVELS OF U.S. GOVERNMENT. ................................................................................ 58
2.15 THE COMMUNIST SCARE AND HYSTERIA OF THE 1950S—
DOMESTIC CONTAINMENT: ....................................................................................... 59
2.16 “NEW LOOK” (NSC 162/2): FURTHER DEFINING THE
CONTAINMENT POLICY ............................................................................................... 63
2.17 A CHANGE IN TIDES— AWAY FROM MCCARTHYISM: ..................... 64
2.18 CONTAINMENT BEYOND 1954: .................................................................. 67
8
2.19 ECONOMIC CONTAINMENT: ..................................................................... 68
2.20 LOVE OF DICTATORSHIPS: ........................................................................ 71
2.21 THE CONTAINMENT POLICY AND THE CUBAN REVOLUTION: .... 72
2.22 THE CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS: .................................................................... 74
2.23 ALLIANCE FOR PROGRESS—THE EVOLUTION OF
MODERNIZATION: ......................................................................................................... 75
2.24 LOVE OF DICTATORS IN THE 1960S: ....................................................... 79
2.25 U.S.S.R. AND CHINA SPLIT: A FRACTURE IN THE COMMUNIST
ARMOR. ............................................................................................................................. 81
2.26 VIETNAM AND A SHIFT IN POLITICAL ATTITUDE: ........................... 83
2.27 CONSERVATIVE RESURGENCE OF ANTI-COMMUNISM, BUT A
CHANGE IN THE BELIEFS OF U.S. POLICY MAKERS: ......................................... 86
2.28 DÉTENTE: THE RELAXATION OF SOVIET-U.S. TENSION ................. 88
2.29 NIXON AND THE LOVE OF DICTATORS: ................................................ 89
2.30 CONCLUSION: ................................................................................................. 92
2.31 APPLYING CHAPTER 1 TO THE CASE STUDIES: GUATEMALA,
CHILE, AND PERU ........................................................................................................... 93
3.0 CHAPTER 2: THE SIMILARITIES BETWEEN GUATEMALA, PERU, AND
CHILE AND THE RELATIVELY RADICAL STANCE OF ALLENDE’S CHILE .......... 95
3.1 A COMPARISON: THE SIMILARITIES BETWEEN AREVALO,
ARBENZ, AND VELASCO (CONCLUSION 1): ........................................................... 96
3.1.1 A quick note on the three major authors: ................................................ 97
9
3.1.2 Arevalo and Arbenz: Political Ideology, Relationship with Domestic
Communists, Stance on Marxism and Communism, and Stance on Democracy: 98
3.1.3 Velasco: Political Ideology, Relationship with Domestic Communists,
Stance on Marxism and Communism, and Stance on Democracy: .................... 106
3.2 SIMILARITIES AND DIFFERENCES BETWEEN REGIMES: ARBENZ
AND VELASCO ............................................................................................................... 112
3.2.1 Arbenz’s Guatemalan Social Platforms: ................................................ 112
3.2.2 Velasco’s Peruvian Social Platforms:...................................................... 114
3.2.3 The CP in Arbenz’s regime: .................................................................... 116
3.2.4 The CP in Velasco’s regime: .................................................................... 118
3.2.5 The Arbenz Regime: Relations with the U.S.S.R. and Socialist countries.
..................................................................................................................... 119
3.2.6 The Velasco Regime: Relations with the U.S.S.R. and Socialist countries.
..................................................................................................................... 121
3.2.7 CP Power in Guatemalan Labor: ............................................................ 123
3.2.8 CP Power in Peruvian Labor: ................................................................. 127
3.3 EXTRA VARIABLES TO CONSIDER: MAKING THE ARGUMENT
THAT VELASCO AND HIS REGIME SHOULD HAVE COUNTERFACTUALLY
BEEN CONSIDERED A THREAT IN THE LATE 1940S AND EARLY 1950S. ..... 134
3.4 OVERVIEW OF COMPARISON: ................................................................ 139
3.5 ALLENDE AND REGIME: MORE RADICAL AND MORE
COMMUNIST THAN AREVALO, ARBENZ, VELASCO AND THEIR
RESPECTIVE REGIMES (CONCLUSION 2): ............................................................ 141
10
3.5.1 Salvador Allende: A Marxist ................................................................... 142
3.5.2 Allende’s personal relations with international communism: .............. 144
3.5.3 Allende’s Regime: A quick note on the regimes relations with the
Socialist Bloc: ............................................................................................................ 146
3.5.4 Chile Social Platforms: ............................................................................. 147
3.5.5 Allende’s Coalition: Popular Unity ......................................................... 148
3.5.6 Allende’s Pro-Democratic Stance: ........................................................... 151
3.5.7 Conclusion: ................................................................................................ 153
3.5.8 Overview: ................................................................................................... 154
4.0 CHAPTER 3: THE PERSPECTIVE OF U.S. POLICY MAKERS AND THE
PERCEPTION OF “THREAT” .............................................................................................. 155
4.1 GUATEMALA: U.S. PERSPECTIVE .......................................................... 158
4.1.1 Anti-Arevalo and Anti-Arbenz sources: ................................................. 165
4.1.2 Pro-Arevalo and Arbenz sources: ........................................................... 166
4.2 PERU: U.S. PERSPECTIVE .......................................................................... 185
4.3 CHILE: U.S. PERSPECTIVE ........................................................................ 198
4.4 CONCLUDING CHAPTER 3: ....................................................................... 206
5.0 CONCLUSION ......................................................................................................... 207
BIBLIOGRAPHY ..................................................................................................................... 213
11
LIST OF TABLES
Table 1: Selected Key Factors in the Political Economy of Peru ............................................... 134
Table 2: Matrix of Policy Orientations of Key Groups .............................................................. 136
Table 3: Arevalo's and Velasco's relations with CP in their respective countries ...................... 139
Table 4: Arevalo and Velasco’s political philosophies, defense of their regimes (i.e. anti-
communist), and stance on democracy: ...................................................................................... 139
Table 5: Comparison of Arbenz and Velasco: The extent of Arbenz ......................................... 139
Table 6: Arbenz and Velasco regimes: CP in government, relations ......................................... 140
Table 7: Communist Control/Influence of the labor movement in Guatemala and Peru ........... 140
Table 8: A comparison of Allende’s regime with the regimes of Arevalo, Arbenz, and Velasco
..................................................................................................................................................... 154
Table 9: A comparison of Allende personal ideology and relationship with domestic and
international communists in comparison to Arbenz, Arevalo, and Velasco: .............................. 154
12
LIST OF FIGURES
Figure 1: U.S. Foreign Policy Perspectives .................................................................................. 21
Figure 2: Gross Increase in Nuclear Weapons Per Year ............................................................... 40
Figure 3: Growth of Peru's Recognized Trade Unions ............................................................... 129
Figure 4: Total Number of Strikes .............................................................................................. 130
Figure 5: Workers Involved in Thousands .................................................................................. 131
Figure 6: Percentage of Total Labor Force ................................................................................. 132
Figure 7: Man Hours Lost in Millions ........................................................................................ 132
Figure 8: Velasco's Cabinet Composition of Coservative, Moderate Reformists and Radicals . 138
Figure 9: Central Intelligence Bulletin ....................................................................................... 192
13
1.0 INTRODUCTION: THE PUZZLE
In order to focus my discussion, I refer to three case studies—Guatemala 1944 to 1954, Chile
1970 to 1973, and Peru 1968 to 1975—which, when compared, will outline the “discrepancy in
perspective” to which I have alluded. In two of these cases—Guatemala 1954 and Chile 1973—
U.S. policy makers helped plan coups d’état because they believed that each regime was a
“communist threat.”
In the first case of Guatemala, I evaluate the Presidencies of Juan Arevalo (1944 to 1950)
and Jacobo Arbenz Guzman (1950 to 1954). U.S. policy makers labeled Arevalo as a potential
“communist threat” as early as 1945, but did not respond through intervention because the threat
had not yet gone beyond a threshold or standard that would require U.S. action at that time. The
perception of a threat grew under the Presidency of Jacabo Arbenz who, in 1950, succeeded
Arevalo. Although U.S. policy makers initially supported Arbenz prior to his election, soon after,
they believed he and his regime to be a threat. By 1952, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
of the U.S. had formed plans to overthrow Arbenz, plans that were later carried out in 1954 by
Guatemalan rebels, with the aid of CIA propaganda and with U.S. air support. The “communist
threat” in Guatemala had become substantial enough in the minds of U.S. policy makers to act.
The second case refers to the Chilean Presidency of Salvador Allende from 1970 to 1973.
As early as the 1950s and throughout Allende’s career, U.S. policy makers considered Allende a
“communist threat.” Consequently, U.S. policy makers engaged in covert anti-Allende
14
propaganda campaigns, including the bribery of various Chilean politicians in the 1964 Chilean
Presidential elections and during Allende’s successful campaign in 1970. Thereafter, the U.S.
government formed plans to overthrow Allende, and on September 11, 1973, Allende’s regime
was ousted in the ensuing coup d’état.
And, in the third case, I evaluate General Juan Velasco’s authoritarian military regime in
Peru, from 1968 to 1975. Velasco and his regime were never considered to be “communist
threats” by U.S. policy makers, but perhaps they should have been.
In light of these three cases studies, I have chosen two “positive” cases (Guatemala and
Chile) and a “negative” case (Peru). The term positive refers to instances when U.S. policy
makers considered the regimes (i.e. those of Arevalo, Arbenz, and Allende) to be “communist
threats,” while the term negative refers to instances when U.S. policy makers did not view a
regime (i.e. Velasco) to be a “communist threat.” Thus the reader might posit:
1) Why is the Peruvian case important? Why should it have been considered a threat?
2) If Peru should have been considered a threat, why was the Peruvian regime never
perceived to be a threat by U.S. policy makers?
In response to these questions, I contend that U.S. policy makers intervened in the
Guatemalan and Chilean states because they considered specific variables (e.g. land reform in
Guatemala) to signify that a “communist threat” was present in each case. The case of Peru is
significant because the variables in Guatemala that led U.S. policy makers to label the Arevalo
and Arbenz regimes as threatening were, in large part, also evident in similar circumstances in
Peru from 1968 to 1975, but, as argued, U.S. policy makers did not consider Velasco or his
regime to be a threat. The variables that caused U.S. policy makers concern in the case of
Guatemala were: the expropriation of U.S. business interests (specifically the land reform
program that seized the land of the United Fruit Company, the largest U.S. company in
15
Guatemala at the time), the communist party’s (CP) control of their respective labor movements,
and the influence of the CP in government, which U.S. policy makers believed was largely based
upon the CP’s influence in the labor movement. Also, a major worry for U.S. policy makers was
that Arevalo and Arbenz’s regimes had formed relations with the Socialist bloc. Although
Arbenz’s regime engaged in only one known arms trade with the Soviet bloc in 1954, U.S.
policy makers considered the arms sale as an indication that a “communist threat” existed.1
In Peru under the Velasco regime, although the CP held virtually no government
posts, Velasco’s closest advisors were exceptionally radical, favoring state control of the
economy. Indeed, Velasco’s respective social reform programs were far more advanced than
Arbenz’s, while Velasco’s government formed extensive bi-lateral trade agreements with the
U.S.S.R including the Peruvian regime’s purchase of Soviet weapons. Moreover, the CP in Peru
wielded great influence over the Peruvian labor movement, which become increasingly radical
and in the final years of Velasco’s tenure a third of the labor force went on strike and violently
demonstrated.2Nevertheless, U.S. policy makers in the 1970s concluded that the Velasco regime
was not a “communist threat.” As Kees, Koonings, and Dirk Kruijt, editors of Political Armies:
The Military and nation building in the age of democracy, argue, “During the Cold-War, US-
related concepts of national security were diffused all over Latin America. In Peru, however, the
‘normal’ overwhelming anti-communism of the Latin American security thesis was felt much
less strongly.”3 So, my research question: What caused U.S. policy makers to perceive the
Velasco regime with a different perspective?
1 See Chapter 2 2 See Chapter 2 3 Koonings, Kees and Dirk Kruijt eds. Political Armies: The Military and nation building in the age of democracy. London: Zed books, 2002.
p. 37.
16
The discrepancy in the perception of U.S. policy makers toward the regimes of
Guatemala and Peru is further complicated by the case of Allende’s Chile from 1970 to 1973.
The case is a clear instance of U.S. covert intervention in Latin America during the very same
years of Velasco’s tenure. Hence, we cannot explain away the Peruvian situation by simply
arguing that U.S. policy makers were no longer interested in the U.S. Cold War containment
policy. Throughout the 1950s and into the 1960s, U.S. policy makers feared Allende well before
his election to the Chilean presidency, actively sought to prevent his election in several instances,
and were perturbed once Allende was elected on the grounds that he and his eventual regime
posed an imminent “communist threat” to the Western hemisphere. Once again, the question:
Why was Velasco’s regime overlooked? And what distinguished Velasco and his regime
from both Arevalo and Arbenz and their respective regimes in Guatemala and Allende and
his regime in Chile?
1.1 SOLVING THE PUZZLE:
Abstractly speaking, for my first thesis, I contend that U.S. policy makers did not view the
Velasco regime’s land reform programs, expropriation of U.S. businesses, extensive relations
with the U.S.S.R, the CP’s control of the labor movement, the fact that Velasco’s closest
advisors were radical and had a Marxist Socialist orientation, as “communist threats” because
U.S. foreign policy and the way U.S. policy makers understood international relations had
evolved from 1944 through the 1970s. That is, the way U.S. policy makers “judged” the world
fundamentally changed. Hence, the discrepancy in perspective was not a mere anomaly, but was
a consequence of this different world outlook. I will also introduce a second thesis: U.S. policy
17
makers favored dictatorships over democracies and thus scrutinized the democratic Arevalo,
Arbenz, and Allende and their regimes to a much greater extent that Velasco’s Authoritarian
military government in Peru. Thus, in this light, I contend that U.S. policy makers were more
likely to judge a situation as threatening in a democracy over a dictatorship.
In more concrete terms, regarding my first thesis, U.S. policy makers in the late 1940s
and early 1950s framed virtually every international and domestic issue in the context of U.S.-
Soviet relations and religiously sought to prevent the spread of communism under the auspices of
the containment policy. Particularly, in the 1950s, U.S. policy makers saw the world as ridden
with “communist subversion”; they were convinced that the Soviet leadership sought to
indoctrinate the minds and souls of every individual with communist ideology. Indeed, like so
many other U.S. citizens, President Harry S. Truman and Dwight D. Eisenhower were consumed
by the fear of communism and its outward expansion from the U.S.S.R, and they viewed
international relations in a bi-polar way: U.S. versus U.S.S.R. and democracy (“good”) versus
communism (“bad”). As a result, the U.S. saw “communism” as a single enemy and anything
related to “communism” would be considered a threat. Thus, in the early 1940s and 1950s, U.S.
policy makers believed that every individual instance of communist growth, whether it was a
growing number of communist members in a given country or a “leftist” reform program that
U.S. policy makers had associated with the communist agenda, needed to be prevented (a
universal goal, to say the least). In short, the communist fight was all that mattered from 1945
through the early 1960s. Indeed, the early 1960s cannot be underestimated because U.S.-Soviet
tensions were exceptionally tense. For example, the Cuban Revolution and the Cuban Missile
Crisis occurred in 1959 and 1962 respectively, marking the height of U.S.-Soviet tension, in
which nuclear war was serious possibility.
18
Yet, by the 1970s, the fear of communism, although it remained present in the minds of
U.S. policy makers, had subsided in comparison to the hysterical anti-communist political
atmosphere of the late 1940s and early 1950s. Many events contributed to this shift in
perspective. For example, the new anti-communist foreign policy of modernization, under the
auspices of President Kennedy’s Alliance for Progress program, called for a renewed interest in
sending U.S. economic aid to Latin America, while simultaneously bolstering Latin America’s
social reform programs. The land reform program in Guatemala probably would not have caused
U.S. policy makers concern if it counterfactually had taken place in the 1960s. Also, in the late
1960s, the Vietnam War forced U.S. policy makers to reconsider their foreign policy goals for a
variety of reasons. When the U.S. citizenry turned against the War, the crusading efforts to
prevent communism everywhere fell out of favor. Moreover, as a result of the Soviet split from
communist China in 1961—when the Sino-Soviet political and ideological relations worsened,
which ultimately resulted in China’s complete rejection of the Soviet styled Marxist ideology—
U.S. policy makers recognized that the Cold War was not defined by neat bi-polar categories. In
this regard, President Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger, Nixon’s National Security Advisor,
who were both once staunch “anti-communist crusaders,” came to view the world as multi-polar;
by the 1970’s they lost interest in responding to every instance of communist growth because it
was not only impractical but U.S. policy makers might be supporting one communist regime
against another (i.e. Nixon supported China in the 1970’s to combat the threat that the US.S.R.
posed).Thus, U.S. policy makers adopted a more practical approach of “selective containment.”
That is, policy makers responded to world issues with a greater degree of understanding in order
to determine if a situation was indeed a threat rather than automatically categorizing every issue
in the context of the Cold War. Hence, my first thesis: the evolution of U.S. foreign policy
19
perspectives and U.S. foreign policy explains why U.S. policy makers viewed and
responded in different ways to similar variables in Guatemala and Peru.4
1.2 HOW FOREIGN POLICY AND POLICY PERSPECTIVE EVOLVED:
In light of this explanation, I argue that four variables shaped “U.S. foreign policy perspective”
from 1945 through the 1970s: (1) international political context, where world events unfold in
the present as decisions are being made; (2) U.S. domestic political atmosphere, where the
general sentiment of U.S. policy makers, the general citizenry, the media, and U.S. business
interests characterize the general collaborative mood in the United States and interpret global and
domestic issues; (3) U.S. foreign policy theory, where U.S. policy makers form a theoretical
response to world issues; (4) foreign policy action, where U.S. policy makers react to world
issues in light of their view of such issues and the prevailing foreign policy of the time.
Although the four variables are interdependent, each of them can—and perhaps should
be—looked at independently. However, the length restraints of this essay make it impossible to
give each variable its due share of analysis. Nonetheless, I explore each variable in order to
explain the discrepancy in U.S. perspectives and action across time.
I contend that the international context set the stage for how U.S. policy makers formed
their foreign policy perceptions (i.e. how they viewed the world). Naturally, it would be
impossible to have a perspective, let alone a foreign policy, without the occurrence of world
events. Hence, U.S. policy makers interpreted world events and formed a theoretical “game
4 See Chapter 1 for full citations and explanation of this overview.
20
plan” for how the U.S. would react (i.e. foreign policy theory). Yet, foreign policy, in theory, did
not catalyze U.S. action but merely directed it. Without individual policy makes to employ the
theory, U.S. foreign policy theory was like a car without a driver. The theory provided the
vehicle for action, but U.S. policy makers were the ones who had to drive the theory and apply it
to specific issues. In turn, the actions taken by U.S. policy makers naturally impacted the way
world events unfolded, but the actions also further defined policy theory and set precedence for
how later action would subsequently be employed. The constant influx of world events, the
variety of perspectives on such events, and the individual application of policy theory to
individual issues demonstrate that foreign policy was a breathable, malleable, and ever changing
theoretical outlook. I have created the following chart to illustrate and clarify this cycle.
21
Figure 1: U.S. Foreign Policy Perspectives
Although this diagram oversimplifies the entire process of forming U.S. foreign policy
perceptions, foreign policy theory, and how policy perception and policy theory, when applied to
a given situation, creates policy action, it nonetheless characterizes the general trend. I argue,
then, that this “trend” provides sound circumstantial evidence to explain, abstractly, not only that
foreign policy evolution is possible, for it surely is, but how U.S. foreign policy and the way U.S.
policy makers viewed the world had evolved and why U.S. policy makers became less anti-
communist from 1945 through the 1970s.
22
1.3 HOW THE CASE OF ALLENDE THREATENS MY THESIS AND WHY THE
THREAT CAN BE DISPELLED:
But, if the atmosphere was not so charged, then why was Allende’s regime considered
exceptionally threatening in the 1970s and, thus, overthrown in a similar manner to Arbenz in
1954? Furthermore, if Allende’s regime was considered a communist threat at the same time as
Velasco was in power (and was not seen as a threat), wouldn’t this contest my basic assertion
that policy and policy perspective had evolved? I submit that such a contention would cause my
thesis difficulty if U.S. policy makers had considered Allende and his regime to be a “communist
threat” on similar grounds that rationalized intervention and a perception of threat in Guatemala,
for U.S. policy makers would have acted similarly in similarly circumstances from 1945 through
the 1970s and, thus, a change in perception would not be apparent (a basic requisite for my entire
thesis). Hence, the paper would have to explain through other means—beyond the rational that
foreign policy and policy perspective evolved— why U.S. perception of threat in Peru was non-
existent. However, my first thesis is not challenged because I argue that the variables of
expropriation of U.S. business interests, CP in government, trade relations with the U.S.S.R., so
forth and so on were only auxiliary threats to the main motivating variables that caused U.S.
policy makers concern with regards to Allende. Indeed, Allende was considered a threat well
before such variables had come into being for his respective administration. That is, Allende was
considered a threat, unlike Arevalo and Arbenz, well before he had ascended the Chilean
Presidency because of variables that transcended the ones seen in Guatemala or Peru: Allende
self-affiliated as a Marxist Socialist throughout his career and a Marxist Socialist president
during his Presidential tenure (As my survey shows, “Marxism,” whatever it may have entailed,
was a label that caused equal consternation for U.S. policy makers in comparison to the label
23
“communism ”);And, Allende had openly affiliated with the international communist movement,
while idealizing communist leaders, such as the U.S.S.R.’s Premier Joseph Stalin, throughout his
political career. Hence, these variables substantiate why U.S. policy makers considered Allende a
threat even into the 1970s
But, for arguments sake, even if we do take into account similar variables that caused
U.S. policy makers concern in the case of the Guatemala regimes, it is apparent that Allende’s
regime included a CP that was more integrated, evolved, and certainly more advanced than the
CP in Arbenz’s regime and obviously Velasco’s. A quick glance at CP party size, CP
involvement in government, and CP role in politics as a whole, in Guatemala, Peru, and Chile,
supports this claim. Thus, even if we ignore the extra variables—Marxist affiliation and
international communist proponent— that moved beyond those seen in Guatemala (e.g.
expropriation or CP control of labor), and focus solely on the variables present in Guatemala,
Allende’s Chile was simply more “radical” and perhaps more “communist” even by this
comparison. In total, U.S. policy makers, despite their new commitment to “selective
containment” and the presence of less anti-communist atmosphere, could not ignore the threat
that Allende and his regime posed. Hence, the threat of Allende eclipsed a threshold or standard
that was much more stringent by the 1970s in comparison to the one utilize to determine threat in
the late 1940s and early 1950s.
24
1.4 THESIS 2:
The discrepancy in perspective between the cases of Guatemala and Peru, and why U.S. policy
makers considered Allende’s regime a threat in the 1970s, can also be explained by my second
thesis: U.S. policy makers favored dictatorial regimes over democratic ones because they
believed that dictatorships were the best defense against communism in the Western
Hemisphere. Arevalo, Arbenz, and Allende were all democratically elected Presidents under
constitutional democracies, while Velasco was an authoritarian military dictator who took power
through a military coup d’état. Hence, I argue that the regimes of Arevalo, Arbenz, and Allende
received greater scrutiny from U.S. policy makers because their democratic regime type.
I hope to show that Allende was investigated and considered a threat well before his
election and as early as the late 1950s, while Velasco was not “tracked” in this manner. Once
again, for Allende, U.S. policy makers had not only formed their opinion that he was a
“communist threat,” but actively pursued a policy of preventing Allende from being elected
President in both 1964 and 1970. Similarly, U.S. policy makers engaged in an intensive
investigation of Guatemala as early as 1944, well before any indication of a “communist threat”
was evident. Contrastingly, in Peru, U.S. policy makers never considered Velasco as more than a
potential threat, while he was in power, that is, if they considered him a threat at all, and,
furthermore, they never investigated him for communist “sympathies” or threat prior to his
tenure. In short, my survey evidences that U.S. policy makers not only concluded that no
“communist threat” was apparent in Peru, but they did not look in the first place. Yet, another
important piece of evidence for the second thesis is that U.S. policy makers quickly concluded
that Velasco was anti-communist shortly into his tenure and, subsequently, utilized Velasco’s
regime as a non-Marxist revolutionary example to Allende’s Marxist Socialist regime in Chile.
25
Lastly, in my first chapter, I will also touch upon a U.S. report on Guatemala that clearly
suggests the U.S. favored the Velasco regime because it was authoritarian. Hence, in total, it
appears that a clear bias directed greater scrutiny of the democratic regimes in the cases of
Guatemala and Chile.
In summary, the initial puzzle and discrepancy in perspective that I have touched
upon to such a great extent can be explained by the shift of U.S. policy makers’ beliefs,
from 1944 through the 1970s, and the sustained policy that favored dictatorships over
democracies.
1.5 ALTERNATIVE THESIS:
Before turning to the body of work and for the sake of argument, I need to address a pressing
concern for my entire paper. I initially began my entire discussion by highlighting one key
premise: U.S. interventions—at least in the cases of Guatemalan and Chile— were motivated by
the containment policy of stemming communist threats. Indeed, the concern that I must address
is one that challenges this basic premise.
Specifically, various historians have argued that the rational for intervention in
Guatemala and Chile was not entirely based upon the need to stop communism, but, rather,
stemmed from a much greater concern for U.S. business interests and the protection of U.S.
business assets in both countries. Thus, in this light, containment was not utilized to stop
communism, but was used as a rationale to intervene on the behalf of U.S. business interests.
Stephen Streeter, in “Interpreting the 1954 U.S. Intervention in Guatemala: Realist,
Revisionist, and Postrevisionist perspective” further defines this alternative thesis. He argues that
26
there are three scholarly perspectives that have evolved and attempt to explain the rational for
U.S. intervention in Guatemala: realist, revisionist, and postrevisionist. A quick summary of
these terms will clarify the difficultly that I am presented with. According to Streeter:
Realists, who concern themselves primarily with power politics, have generally blamed the Cold War on an aggressive, expansionist Soviet empire. Because realists believe that Arbenz was a Soviet puppet, they view his overthrow as the necessary rollback of communism in the Western Hemisphere. Revisionists, who place the majority of the blame for the Cold War on the United States, emphasize how Washington sought to expand overseas markets and promote foreign investment, especially in the Third World. Revisionists allege that because the State Department came to the rescue of the [United Fruit Company] UFCO, the U.S. intervention in Guatemala represents a prime example of economic imperialism. Postrevisionists, a difficult group to define precisely, incorporate both strategic and economic factors in their interpretation of the Cold War. They tend to agree with revisionists on the issue of Soviet responsibility, but they are much more concerned with explaining the cultural and ideological influences that warped Washington’s perception of the “communist threat”. According to post revisionists, the Eisenhower administration officials turned against Arbenz because they failed to grasp that he represented a nationalist rather than a communist.5
Hence, the revisionist perspective characterizes the alternative thesis, whereas, the post-
revisionist perspective is more in line with my own thesis. In effect, the revisionist argument
contends that the UFCO and high ranking U.S. officials, such as the Dulles Brothers, John and
Allen Dulles, who were the respective Secretary of State and Director of Intelligence, conspired
to inflate an already present communist threat that was believed to exist in Guatemala in order to
legitimize Arbenz’s overthrow, not in the name of containment per say, but in the name of
protecting UFCO assets that were being expropriated. Although Streeter is only referring to the
case of Guatemala, a similar explanation might be employed to explain U.S. intervention in
Chile (i.e. one might argue that U.S. policy makers intervened in against Allende and his regime
5 Streeter, Stephen M. “Interpreting the 1954 U.S. Intervention in Guatemala: Realist, Revisionist, and Postrevisionist Perspectives.” The History Teacher, Vol. 34, No. 1, p. 62, June 2000. Web. 25 June 2011. .
http://www.jstor.org/
27
because of the threat they posed to U.S. business interests, not necessarily because of the
“communist threat” they posed.)
I contend that although the protection of U.S. business interests may have been an
auxiliary concern in both Guatemala and Chile, the main concern was the communist threat that
U.S. policy makers believed to exist. Without going too much into the matter, Streeter
thoroughly articulates how the revisionist perspective evolved in the late 1960s and early 1970s,
but was later refuted and debunked by “archival” evidence of the CIA plans to overthrow Arbenz
and postrevisionist authors such as Piero Gleijese who wrote his account of the Guatemalan
intervention in Shattered Hope, published in 1991.6 For example, Streeter contends that
“Shattered Hope verified the claim of post-revisionist studies that Eisenhower administration
officials had viewed the Fruit Company’s plight as a “subsidiary” problem, secondary to the
issue of communism.” In fact, my account of the U.S. perspective for the Guatemalan case,
which focuses on the telegram correspondence between the American embassy in Guatemala and
the U.S. State Department, also thoroughly supports the claim that the U.S. government was
primarily motivated by the containment policy and the goal of stemming a “communist threat” in
Guatemala. Indeed, my survey agrees with Streeter that even at the height of Arbenz’s
expropriation of UFCO’s assets, the “Eisenhower administration officials worried less about the
impact of Arbenz’s land reform on United Fruit than they did about its impact on the
countryside.” In other words, U.S. makers, although clearly concerned with the land reform
program and although concerned about its impact on the UFCO, was ultimately far more
concerned with how the land reform program related to CP strength in Guatemala and in
Arbenz’s regime.
6 Ibid., p. 66, 67.
28
Moreover, in support of my refutation of the revisionist theory, Louis Halle, the Jr. Policy
Planning Staff of the State Department, argues that U.S. policy maker’s primary concern was
communism in Guatemala. In a telegram to the Director of Policy Planning Staff, on May 28,
1954, and only a month prior to Arbenz’s overthrow, Halle stated:
The nationalistic and reformist elements in the Guatemalan situation have hitherto loomed larger for the Latin Americans than the element of international communism .They believe that we exaggerated the latter for our own purposes, and this belief is not weakened when we meet it with redoubled protestations... If the above analysis is sound the conclusion must be that the time is not ripe for a collective inter-American action.”7 Thus, Halle fully recognized that certain factions, in this case Latin Americans, were
suspicious of U.S. intentions in Guatemala and believed that the “threat of communism” was
really a front to legitimize U.S. intervention that would be enacted to protect U.S. business
interests. But the tone of this letter indicates that Halle did not favor U.S. intervention because he
realized how such an intervention would look, that is, it would appear to be an imperialist
intervention for the sake of protecting U.S. business interests. Consequently, Halle called for a
more “relaxed attitude generally” (i.e. non-intervention) because he worried that intervention
would “turn all of Latin America against us to the advantage of the international Communist
movement” and if the intervention failed would “strengthen Communism in Guatemala while
antagonizing Latin American generally.”8 Hence, Halle’s stance on Guatemala was ultimately
related to how communism was impacting not only the Guatemala state, but Latin America as a
whole. However, it might be argued that Halle’s point is moot because the U.S. covert
intervention had been planned for two years prior to Halle’s report letter and the intervention
commenced a month after the report. Thus, Halle was clearly unaware about the plans, which
7 Halle, Louis Jr. J. “Policy Planning Staff, Memorandum to Director of the Policy Planning Staff (May 28, 1954).” King, John A. and John R. Vile. Presidents from Eisenhower through Johnson, 1953-1969: debating the issue in Pro and Con Primary Documents. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2006. p. 46.
8 King, John A. and John R. Vile. Presidents from Eisenhower through Johnson, 1953-1969: debating the issue in Pro and Con Primary Documents. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2006. p. 46.
29
would further support a conspiracy theory because Halle’s disposition was not characteristic of
the more elite policy makers who favored a “collective inter-American action” and actually
planned and orchestrated the coup.
Yet, even if we disregard Halle’s perspective, President Eisenhower’s position on
Guatemala substantiates that although he may have been concerned about the expropriation of
U.S. business interests, his overriding concern was the prevention of communist power in the
Western Hemisphere. For example, in his book Mandate for Change, the White House Years,
1953-1956, published nine years after Arbenz’s overthrow, Eisenhower argued:
The troubles had been long-standing, reaching back nine years to the Guatemalan revolution of 1944, which had resulted in the overthrow of the dictator General Jorge Ubico. Thereafter, the Communists busied themselves with agitating and with infiltrating labor unions, peasant organizations, and the press and radio. In 1950 a military officer, Jacabo Arbenz Guzman, came to power and by his actions soon created the strong suspicions that he was merely a puppet manipulated by Communists…For example, on February 24, 1953, the Arbenz government announced its intention, under agrarian reform law, to seize about 225,000 acres of unused United Fruit Company land. The company lost its appeal to the Guatemalan Supreme Court to prevent this discriminatory and unfair seizure…Expropriation in itself does not, of course, prove Communism; expropriation of oil and agriculture properties years before in Mexico had not been fostered by Communists. 9 Notice how Eisenhower refers to Arbenz’s land reform only in how it related to the
presence of a possible communist threat in Guatemala, but was not described as threatening for
its own sake. He even contends that “expropriation itself does not, of course prove communism.”
Once again, the expropriation was highlighted because it suggested a “communist threat.”
Eisenhower also supports the claim that the U.S. intervention in Guatemala was motivated by a
fear of communism when he states:
In the two months from March to May, 1954, the agents of international Communism in Guatemala continued their efforts to penetrate and subvert their neighboring Central American states, using consular agents for political purposes and
9 Dwight D. Eisenhower. Mandate for Change, The White House Years, 1953-1956. Gaiden City, NY: Doubleday and Co., 1963. p. 421-426.
30
fomenting political assassinations and strikes. In Guatemala itself the government answered protests by suspending constitutional rights, conducting mass arrests, and killing leaders in the political opposition.10 The language here further exemplifies Eisenhower’s focus. When he states the “agents of
international Communism in Guatemala continued their efforts,” he is clearly supporting the
claim that U.S. was focused on communism and the threat it posed in Guatemala and to U.S.
interests! The only way to refute such statements is to suggest that Eisenhower purposely was
lying in his book in order to frame the Guatemalan situation as a “communist threat” in order to
cover up the conspiracy. Perhaps it is not impossible that Eisenhower would lie, but such a
claim appears highly skeptical, to say the least. Moreover, Eisenhower does not merely suggest
that containment motivated action in Guatemala, but explicitly outlines this point:
I considered the matter carefully. I realized well that United States intervention in Central America and Caribbean affairs earlier in the century has greatly injured our standing in all of Latin America. On the other hand, it seemed to me that to refuse cooperate in providing indirect support to a strictly anti-communist faction in this struggle would be contrary to the letter and spirit of the Caracas resolution (i.e. anti-communist resolution). I had faith in the strength of the inter-American resolve therein set forth. 11
In this statement, Eisenhower recognizes the same difficulties that Halle highlighted in
1953: intervention would have serious ramifications in how Latin American’s would judge U.S.
action. Nonetheless, Eisenhower favored intervention because he believed the communist threat
outweighed the importance of catering to the concerns of Latin Americans. Once Arbenz’s
regime was ousted, Eisenhower concluded, “By the middle of 1954 Latin America was free, for
the time being at least, of any fixed outposts of Communism.”12 In summary, Eisenhower and
U.S. policy makers were first and foremost concerned with the “threat of communism.”
10 Ibid. 11 Ibid. 12 Ibid.
31
Aside from Eisenhower’s perspective, according to Streeter, the CIA official who
orchestrated the plans (i.e. PBSUCCESS) to overthrow Arbenz, Richard Bissell, reported “I
never heard Allen Dulles discuss United Fruit’s Interests.” 13 Indeed, Assistant Secretary of State
also told Costa Rican leader Jose Figueres: “Of course, we expected American rights to be
protected, including the United Fruit Company; but the United Fruit Company’s interests were
secondary to the main interest.”14 Thus, all of these sources unanimously agree that communism
was the main issue. Yet again, a refutation to this claim would be to suggest that all of these
sources conspired to lie.
However, to affirm that the main motivation for intervention in Guatemala was to “roll
back” a communist threat is not to say that the UFCO played no part in causing U.S. officials to
become more anxious and more aware of a threat in Guatemala. In fact, I grant that U.S. business
interests and their respective lobbying of the U.S. government and propaganda campaigns, which
included the hiring of professional journalists to characterize Arbenz and his regime and
Guatemalan society as a whole as a hot bed for communists, aroused further suspicions that were
already present for U.S. policy makers. Such efforts were most likely quite effective considering
the extreme sensitivity to communist threats in the U.S. from 1945 to 1954. Thus, such efforts
would surely “stoke the fire.” Hence, the issue of economic imperialism and the policy of
containment were clearly not mutually exclusive from one another. The point remains, however,
that the underlying motivation for action in Guatemala was rooted on the belief that a communist
threat was present.
Moving on to the other case studies—Chile and Peru—I can also say the Allende and his
regime in Chile were overthrown because of the “communist threat” they posed and not to
13 Streeter, p. 65. 14 Ibid.
32
protect U.S. business interests. As with Guatemala, the “communist threat” may have been
exacerbated by a concern for U.S. business interests because, like Guatemala, U.S. businesses,
such as ITT, offered money to combat Allende’s regime and lobbied the U.S. government for
action. But, still, U.S. policy makers had determined that Allende was a threat well before his
election and before he posed an economic threat. The fear of Allende’s Marxist orientation
predated the other concern of possible expropriation, let alone the other variables. Indeed, U.S.
policy makers labeled Allende a “communist doup” in the 1950s. It would be absurd to suggest
that U.S. policy makers planned twenty years in advance for how they would combat Allende to
prevent his potential expropriation of U.S. business interests if he happened to find his way to the
presidency. Nevertheless, as in the case of Guatemala, containment and the protection of U.S.
business interests was not mutually exclusive from one another. Hence, once Allende was in
power, it might be correctly argued that U.S. businesses played a role in furthering efforts for his
overthrow, but, as in Guatemala, the primary motivation for Allende’s overthrow was ultimately
linked to the original U.S. concern that Allende and his regimes posed a “communist threat.”
Lastly, the case of Peru also thoroughly supports the fact that U.S. policy makers were
not willing to intervene to protect U.S. business interest, especially in the 1970s. As I will argue,
Velasco and his regime engaged in widespread expropriation on a similar scale to Allende’s
regime and a much larger scale than Arbenz’s. Yet, U.S. policy makers (although reacting to the
Peruvian regimes’ respective expropriation of U.S. business interests through economic
sanctions, such as the Hickenlooper amendment, which called for the removal of U.S. aid to
countries that expropriated U.S. businesses) never proposed intervention and thus intervention
was never an option. In fact, in reference to the expropriation of the U.S. owned International
Petroleum (IPC) Company in Peru, Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs
33
Covey Oliver responded to the expropriation and reported that “the United States recognized the
right of a sovereign nation to take territory within its jurisdiction for public purpose.” Oliver did
clarify, “however…the U.S. also expected fulfillment of the corresponding obligation under
international law to make prompt, adequate and effective compensation.”15
Yet, I must note that the ICP did not lobby the U.S. government nearly to the extent that
the UFCO did in Guatemala. In fact, the IPC actually favored that the entire expropriation be
kept quiet. Hence, it might be argued that this lack of lobbying effort or propaganda campaign
may have been a difference that mattered, that is, because the IPC did not heavily lobby congress
and did not engage in propaganda campaigns, the U.S. did not intervene. Yet, this is a moot point
because other U.S. companies in Peru that were expropriated did lobby the U.S. government. For
example, the Peruvian government expropriated the very same firms that lobbied so heavily for
Allende’s overthrow in Chile, including Harold Geneen’s ITT, who surely lobbied the U.S.
government for action.16
Moreover, not only was there no intervention, or discussion of one, but U.S. policy
makers supported the Velasco regime as a non-Marxist revolutionary example to Allende’s
Marxist-Socialist regime in Chile. 17Thus, although U.S. policy makers were clearly concerned
with the expropriation of U.S. businesses in Peru, such as the IPC expropriation, and heavily
focused on this issue in their diplomatic correspondence, they were clearly more worried about
the Marxist-revolution in Chile, thus substantiating that the main threat was still communism, at
least in terms of the motivating factor that caused U.S. intervention. In light of this entire
15 “Memorandum from Secretary of State Rusk to President Johnson: The Peruvian Situation.” 11 October 1968. Foreign Relations: 1964-1968, Volume 31, 1968. p. 1068.
16 Maurer, Noel. Much Ado About Nothing: Expropriation and compensation in Peru and Venezuela, 1968-75. Working Paper, Harvard Business School, 2011. p. 11.
17 See U.S. perspective on Peru in Chapter 3
34
discussion, the alternative thesis does not refute my most basic claim: U.S. policy makers were
motivated by the containment policies goal of stopping the spread of communism.
1.6 HOW THE PAPER WILL PROCEED
Turning to how the entire paper will argue for my general thesis, I separate my discussion into
three chapters. Chapter 1 summarizes and articulates how the four variables—international
political context, domestic political atmosphere, foreign policy theory, and foreign policy
action—impacted policy perception and how U.S. policy makers respond to individual events.
Furthermore, this chapter describes how foreign policy and policy perception evolved, which
explains the discrepancy in perspective between the case of Guatemala and Peru. Also, I will
explain how U.S. policy maker’s policy of favoring dictatorships over democracy was present
from 1945 through the 1970s. Chapter 2 will examine the similarities that I argue existed
between the cases of Guatemala and Peru, which is a very basic prerequisite prior to my
explanation that a difference in perception existed between the cases (it might go without saying
that an inconsistency in perception and action would be inconsequential if the variables were not
similar), a conclusion that I will thoroughly argue for in Chapter 3. Also, in Chapter 2, I will
provide evidence for my claim that Allende and his regime were considered a threat in the 1970s
because of extra-variables—Marxist ideology and international communist supporter— beyond
those seen in the cases of Guatemala and Chile (e.g. land reform). With regards to Chapter 3, I
will analyze U.S. policy makers telegram correspondence and conversations in the State
Department, the CIA, and between the respective U.S. presidents and their advisors for all three
cases, which will provide grounds for my claim that U.S. policy makers viewed the variables of
35
expropriation of U.S. business interests, CP control of labor movement, relations with the
U.S.S.R., and the respective leaders relations with the CP as indications that a communist threat
was present in Guatemala. Moreover, the analysis of these telegrams and prime sources from the
National Security archive will show that U.S. policy makers did not consider Velasco’s regime
as a threat and never framed the variables considered threatening in Guatemala as a threat in
Peru. Moreover, I will show how U.S. policy makers were exceptionally concerned about
Allende well before his election to the presidency and sought to oppose his election both in 1964
and 1970. I will lastly highlight that such efforts failed and when Allende won the presidential
election, U.S. policy makers quickly formed plan to overthrow him. In total, all three chapters
support my general argument that I have proposed up until this point.
36
2.0 CHAPTER 1
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE OF THE CONTAINMENT POLICY: EVOLUTION OF
FOREIGN POLICY AND FOREIGN POLICY PERSPECTIVE
In this chapter, I will provide evidence for my basic claim that the four variables—international
political context, domestic political atmosphere, U.S. foreign policy theory, and U.S. foreign
policy action—determine policy perception and how it evolved over time, which provides
explanation for the discrepancy in perspective and foreign policy from 1945 through the 1970s.
In short, this chapter attempts to show how U.S. policy makers were exceptionally anti-
communist in the later 1940s and early 1950s, but were far less anti-communist by the 1970s.
2.1 THE COLD WAR BEGINS:
At the end of the World War II, the Allied powers converged on Berlin, Germany—the U.S.S.R.
from the East and the remainder of the allied forces from the West. Although the U.S.S.R. and
allied forces had once united for a common cause, the end of the War resulted in a divided
Europe: the U.S. and allied forces dominating the Western half of Europe and the U.S.S.R.
dominating the east.
According to noted historians Thomas Paterson, Garry Clifford, Shane Maddock,
Deborah Kisatsky, and Kenneth Hagan, “As Washington moved to fill the power vacuums left
37
by the defeated Axis and retreating colonial powers, it encountered an obstreperous competitor in
Joseph Stalin’s Soviet Union.”18 Furthermore, Paterson, et al. argue that “The confrontation
between the United States and the Soviet Union derived from the different post-War needs,
ideology, style, and power of the two rivals and drew on a history of frosty relations. Each saw
the other, in mirror image, as the world’s bully.”19
From the U.S. perspective, and, perhaps, the allied powers alike, Griffin Fariello, in Red
Scare: Memories of the American Inquisition, recounts that Averell Harriman, U.S. ambassador
to the Soviet Union, “Warned President Harry Truman on April 20, 1945, that America was
faced with a ‘barbarian invasion of Europe.’ Truman replied that he was ‘not afraid of the
Russians’ and intended to be ‘firm.’”20 Likewise, on May 12, 1945, Winston Churchill, the
former Prime Minister of Britain, telegrammed President Harry Truman and reported that “An
iron curtain is drawn down upon their front. We do not know what is going on behind. There
seems little doubt that the whole of the region east of the line Lubeck-Trieste-Corfu will soon be
completely in their hands.” In the same telegram, Churchill warned that a removal of American
troops from Europe would bring “Soviet power into the heart of Western Europe and the descent
of the iron curtain between us and everything eastward.”21
Despite such fears, Paterson, et al. also contends that “The United States emerged from
World War II a full-fledged global power for the first time in its history. An asymmetry—not a
balance—of power existed.”22 Likewise, according to Geir Lundestad, in Major Developments in
International Politics: 1945-1986: “The power base of the Soviet Union was not comparable to
18 Paterson, Thomas, J. Garry Clifford, Shane J. Maddock, Deborah Kisatsky, and Kenneth J. Hagan. American Foreign Relations: A History since 1895, Vol. 2, Edition 6. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2005. p. 228.
19 Ibid., p. 231. 20 Fariello, Griffin. Red Scare: Memories of the American Inquisition; An Oral History. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1995. p. 31. 21 Churchill, Winston. The Second World War, vi, Triumph and Tragedy. London: Cassell, 1945. p. 498, 499, 523. 22 Paterson et al., p. 228.
38
that of the United States. The U.S.S.R. had suffered enormous losses during the War. Its
populations had been cut in half. Similar conditions existed in agriculture” and “The Soviet
Union produced 65,000 cars a year, the United States seven million.”23 Hence, we might posit
whether or not the anxiety of U.S. policy makers was over exaggerated.
2.2 INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL CONTEXT (LATE 1940S AND EARLY 1950S):
Yet, much evidence suggests that U.S. anxiety was not unfounded. For example, according to
Steven Hook and John Spanier in American Foreign Policy Since World War II:
After Germany’s second defeat in 1945, the Russian threat reemerged. Already the heartland power, Soviet Russia extended its arms into the center of Europe, reclaimed its dominant positions in northern China, and sought to exploit weaknesses along its southern border from Turkey to Pakistan. Thus one reason for post-war conflict was geopolitical: Russian land power expanded.24 Hence, the expansion of Russian land power certainly would qualify as an existential
threat, for it was not an imagined perception, but a tangible, and perhaps measurable,
phenomenon. Indeed, many other facts and events substantiate U.S. fears. For example,
Lundestad contends that “The Soviet Union was a superpower primarily in one field, and that
was in terms of military strength, especially the number of men under arms.”25 Furthermore,
according to David Painter in The Cold War: An International History, following World War II,
U.S. efforts to rebuild Europe through the “Marshal Plan” were combatted by the U.S.S.R.26
Also, the Western European communists attempted to disrupt the Marshal Plan, while the
23 Lundestad, Geir. Major Developments in International Politics: 1945-1986. Stavanger: Norwegian University Press, 1986. p. 18. 24 Hook, Steven W. and John Spanier. American Foreign Policy Since World War II. Washington, D.C.: Congressional Quarterly Press, 2010.
p. 41. 25 Ibid. 26 Painter, David S. The Cold War: An international history. London: Routledge, 1999. p. 22.
39
U.S.S.R. imposed “a blockade on all land and water routes to Berlin (June 1948-May 1949) to
protest Western plans to unify and rebuild the three Western zones of Germany.”27 Indeed,
Painter concludes that “both actions increased Western suspicions of Soviet intentions.”28
The U.S. also became increasingly alarmed by a series of communist-inspired revolutions
that transpired worldwide beginning in the mid-1940s that continued into the early 1950s: the
Greek and Turkish episodes in the mid-1940s, in which communists threatened the security of
both states; the Soviet backed uprisings in Northern Iran in the mid-1940s29; the communist coup
in Czechoslovakia backed by the U.S.S.R. in 1948; the fall of China in 1949; and the Korean
War, beginning in 1950. Also, in 1950, the U.S.S.R. and the People’s Republic of China
concluded a mutual defense treaty.30 Moreover, five years later, in 1955, the Warsaw Pact was
formed, which “created a joint military command” in control of various communist-run states
(The Warsaw Pact’s counterpart was the U.S. led coalition: NATO. Axelrod contends that “the
creation of NATO and the Warsaw Pact hardened hostile divisions of sides in the Cold War”).
31 Yet, even further evidence demonstrates that U.S. policy makers had solid footing for
considering the U.S.S.R., and thereby, communism, as a serious threat. For example, another
source of U.S. anxiety was the authoritarian nature of Joseph Stalin’s regime, which committed
vast human rights violations against Soviet citizens within the borders of the U.S.S.R. Caroline
Kennedy-Pipe argues, in The Origins of the Cold War, that in discussing the origins of U.S.
anxiety toward the Soviet Union “we cannot and should not be blinded to the great brutality that
27 Ibid. 28 Ibid., p. 23. 29 Paterson et al., p. 234. 30 Axelrod, Alan. The Real History of the Cold War: A New Look at the Past. London: Sterling Publishing Co. Inc., 2009. p. 431. 31 Ibid.
40
Stalin’s regime and that of his successor Nikita Khrushchev visited upon the peoples of Eastern
and Central Europe.”32
The mounting tensions for U.S.-Soviet relations also resulted from the “arms race,” in
which both nations built expansive nuclear arsenals to combat each other’s nuclear dominance.33
The U.S.S.R.’s first successful test of a nuclear bomb occurred in August of 1949.34 Kennedy-
Pipe argues that “it was the Soviet creation of a hydrogen bomb in August 1953, one year after
American success in this area that really marked its arrival as a superpower at least in nuclear
terms.”35 According to Dan Lindley & Kevin Clemency, in “Low-cost nuclear arms races,” from
1951 to 1965 “the United States and the Soviet Union produced a total of 37,737 nuclear
weapons (31,613 for the United States and 6,124 for the Soviet Union.)”36 The following chart37
portrays the nuclear arms buildup in the United States from 1951 to 1965:
Figure 2: Gross Increase in Nuclear Weapons Per Year
32 Kennedy-Pipe, Caroline. The Origins of the Cold War. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007. p. 2. 33 Ipid., p. 92. 34 Painter, p. 23. 35 Kennedy-Pipe, p. 91 36 Lindley, Dan and Kevin Clemency. “Low-cost nuclear arms races.” Bulletin of the Atomic Scientist, Vol. 65, Issue 2, p. 45, April 2009.
Web. 22 Nov. 2011. . 37 Ibid., p. 46.
http://web.ebscohost.com/
41
In total, all of these events—the U.S.S.R.’s expansion of territory, Soviet resistance to the
Marshal plan, world-wide communist revolutions, the authoritarian nature of Stalin’s regime, and
the arms race— confirms that the fears of U.S. policy makers were substantial and based on hard
evidence. However, it is interesting to note that the U.S. produced five times as many nuclear
weapons from 1951 to 1965 than the U.S.S.R. Thus, once again, although the threat was not
unfounded, was it exaggerated?
2.3 CONTAINMENT: THE BEGINNING
In reaction to the international political context and the threat that U.S. policy makers believed
the U.S.S.R. and communism posed, the policy of containment was born on February 22, 1946,
when George Kennan, an expert on the U.S.S.R. and a junior diplomat at the American Embassy
in Moscow, forwarded a telegram to Washington that reflected on his view of the U.S.S.R’s
growing power and its role in international relations. The telegram summarized Kennan’s view
that, like former Prime Minister Churchill, Ambassador Harriman, and President Truman, the
U.S.S.R. and communism were the preeminent threats to U.S interests. Thereafter, in July 1947,
in Foreign Affairs, Kennan published “The Sources of Soviet Conduct,” which was originally
titled “X” article and effectively outlined the original telegram. In these documents and in
response to the threat that Kennan believed that the U.S.S.R. and communism posed, he argued
for “a policy of firm containment, designed to confront Russia with unalterable counterforce at
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every point where they show signs of encroaching upon the interest of a peaceful and stable
world.”38
According to Henry Kissinger, the National Security Advisor for President Nixon,
Kennan’s policy recommendations originated from deep-rooted beliefs: “For Kennan,
communist ideology was at the heart of Stalin’s approach to the world. Stalin regarded the
Western capitalist powers as irrevocably hostile.”39 Also, according to Kissinger, Kennan further
believed that the Kremlin sought to expand its territory as a result of Stalin’s increased sense of
paranoia and that Soviet policy was “to make sure that it has filled every nook and cranny
available to it in the basin of world power.”40 Kenneth Jenson argues that “[Kennan] painted a
dark picture of a Soviet Union ‘fanatically committed to the belief that with the U.S. there can be
no permanent modus vivendi, that it is desirable and necessary that the internal harmony of our
society be disrupted, our traditional way of life destroyed, the international authority of our state
broken if Soviet Power is to be secure.’”41
2.4 THE VAGUE AND ABSTRACT NATURE OF KENNAN’S POLICY
RECOMMENDATIONS:
Nevertheless, Kennan’s policy recommendations failed to explicitly define what the term
counterforce meant. In fact, my survey of Kennan’s article as a whole reveals that he never
38 Kissinger, Henry. “Reflections on Containment.” Foreign Affairs, Vol. 73, No. 3, p. 120, June 1994. Web. 7 July 2011. < http://www.jstor.org.>
39 Ibid., p. 114. 40 Ibid. 41 Jensen, Kenneth M. Origins of the Cold War: The Novikov, Kennan, and Roberts ‘Long Telegrams’ of 1946. Washington DC: United State
Institute of Peace, 1991. p. 128. (As cited in: Crockatt, Richard. The Fifty Years War: The United States and the Soviet Union in world politics, 1941-1991.New York: Routledge, 1995. p. 59.)
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explicitly defined how communism would, in practice, be contained, but, rather, simply
explained that it should be contained, thus, leaving much of his theory open to interpretation. In
his book George F. Kennan and the Making of American Foreign Policy, 1947-1950, Wilson
Miscamble agrees with my survey and argues:
Containment as expressed in the “X” article represented no more than a broad approach. It was not a prescription for policy. It did not outline in any detail exactly what the U.S. should do. The temptation to characterize Kennan as a Moses-type figure descending to give the law of containment over to a disoriented group of American policymakers should be resisted. Others would play a role in defining and fleshing out containment and the doctrine would come to be understood only in light of these actions.42
2.5 U.S. POLICY MAKERS AND THE AMERICA PUBLIC’S PERSPECTIVE OF
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: LEGAL-MORALISM:
Yet, before understanding how U.S. policy makers interpreted the containment policy and
defined it through action, it is important to understand how U.S. policy makers and the general
U.S. citizenry viewed international relations at this time and, also, how sensitive they were to
communism. As argued in my introduction, these beliefs determined how U.S. policy makers
reacted to world events.
Jonathan Knight, in George Frost Kennan and the Study of American Foreign Policy:
Some Critical Comments, argues that American Foreign policy was evolving through a
“legalistic-moralistic” approach to international politics: an approach that “attempts to substitute
moral judgment for calculations of the national interest and legal norms for the precarious
42 Miscamble, Wilson D. George F. Kennan and the Making of American Foreign Policy, 1947-1950. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1992. p. 32.
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relations between states.”43 Michael Polley clarifies the “legal-moralistic approach” in A
Biography of George F. Kennan and contends:
According to Kennan, most American’s assumed that the legal principles that had provided such great stability in American domestic politics could also bring stability to international relations…aggressors and victims, for instance, would be clearly defined…In addressing the moralistic component of the American approach to international relations, Kennan focused on twentieth-century diplomacy…Ever since the first half of the nineteenth century, Americans exhibited a passionate tendency to embrace “good” liberation movements and their struggle against “evil” tyrants.44 According to Jerel Rosati and James Scott, in The Politics of United States Foreign
Policy, what Jonathan Night labeled a “legal-moralistic” was synonymous with “Cold War
internationalism.” Rosati et al., contend that “Cold War internationalists saw a conflict-ridden,
bipolar world that pitted the Soviet Union and communism against the United States and
democracy.”45 Furthermore, Rosati et al. argue:
One common tendency in world politics…is for the mind to form beliefs and schemas of the “other.” The enemy image—according to which “we are good” and “they are bad”—may be the most simpleminded image of all. Such is the image of the Soviet Union and communism that most Americans acquired during the Cold War. Once formed, such an image of the enemy tends to be very rigid and resistant to change. 46 Perhaps most importantly, according to Kennan (following his service as a foreign
diplomat) in his personal Memoirs: 1925-1950, published in 1967:
On many occasions…I have been struck by the congenital aversion of Americans to taking specific decisions on specific problems, and by their persistent urge to seek universal formulae or doctrines in which to clothe and justify particular actions…to this day I am uncertain as to the origins of this persistent American urge to universalization or generalization of decision. It was not enough for us, when circumstances forced us into World War I, to hold in view the specific reasons for our entry: our War effort had to be clothed in the form of an effort to make the world (nothing less) ‘safe for democracy’…we did not feel comfortable until we had wrapped our military effort in the
43 Knight, Jonathan. “George Frost Kennan and the Study of American Foreign Policy: Some Critical Comments”. The Western Political Quarterly, Vol. 20, No. 1, p. 150, 1967. Web. 10 July 2011. .
44 Polley, Michael. A Biography of George F. Kennan: The Education of a Realist. Lewiston: The Edwin Mellen Press, 1990. p. 88. 45 Rosati, Jerel A. and James M. Scott. The Politics of United States Foreign Policy. United States: Thomason Wadsworth, 2007. p. 362. 46 Ibid., p. 294.
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wholly universalistic—and largely meaningless—generalities. Something to this compulsion became apparent in the post War period in the tendency of many Americans to divide the world neatly into Communist and “free world” components, to avoid recognition of specific differences among countries on either side, and to search for general formulas to govern our relations with the one or the other.47
2.6 IMPLICATIONS OF THE LEGAL-MORALISTIC PERSPECTIVE:
As a result of U.S. policy makers’ and citizens’ perspectives on international relations in the
post- World War II period, from 1945 through the mid-1950s, Walter Lippmann and Hans
Morgenthau, in 1947, denounced “the sweeping implications of the containment formula”
believing that containment entailed commitments without proper limits to U.S. action. 48
Lippmann and Morgenthau argued that the policy of containment prescribed an unconditional
U.S. response to “communist threats.” Therefore, they contended that the policy oversimplified
the complexity of the “communist problem” and one universal answer would never suffice, much
like one key does not fit all locks. According to Jerry Sanders, in Breaking out of the
Containment Syndrome: “those who recommended a course of moderate containment argued for
measured and reasonable means to achieve ends based on irrational and totalistic premises.”49
In an attempt to combat the legal-moralistic perspective, “Morgenthau appealed to the
American public to forget about ‘the crusading notion that any nation, however virtuous and
powerful, can have the mission to make the world over in its own image.”50 According to Polley,
“Kennan [like Lippmann and Morgenthau] turned to the question of how to impose a realist
47 Kennan, George F. Memoirs, 1952-1950. Boston: Atlantic Monthly Press, 1967. p. 323. 48 Gati, Charles. “What Containment Meant”. Foreign Policy, no. 7, p. 30, 1972. Web. 7 July 2011. . 49 Sanders, Jerry W. “Breaking Out of the Containment Syndrome.” World Policy Journal, Vol. 1, no. 1, p. 106, 1983. Web. 9 July 2011.
. 50 Gati, p. 30.
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perspective that would modify the shortcomings of legal-moralism, his suggestions were brief,
but the introduced theme that would recur constantly in his diplomatic writings…a rejection of
the universal application of American values.”51
It might be said that Kennan, Lippman, and Morgenthau were idealizing sentiments that
were ahead of their time because, as will shortly be discussed, their sentiments were greatly
accepted by U.S. policy makers and the U.S. citizenry by the 1970s. Nonetheless, from 1944
through the early 1960s, the legal-moralistic perspective dominated the psyche of U.S. policy
makers and American citizens.
2.7 AN ANTI-COMMUNIST LIBERAL-CONSERVATISM CONSENSUS AND A
DEFINING OF KENNAN’S ORIGINAL POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS:
The legal-moralistic perspective was not limited to one faction or another. Indeed, liberals and
conservatives alike viewed the world in the legal-moralistic and bi-polar way and sought to
combat communism wherever it arose. Rosati, et al. contends:
During the Cold War years, according to Godfrey Hodgson, in America in Our Time, “a strange hybrid, liberal conservatism, blanketed the scene and muffled the debate.” The two major aspects of the liberal-conservative were, first, belief in a democratic-capitalistic political economy based on private enterprise and, second, the fear of communism. Thus, the foreign policy consensus behind containing the threat of Soviet communism abroad was part of a larger ideological consensus in American society.52
Godfrey similarly argues that “since the [anti-communist] consensus had made converts
on the Right as well as on the Left, only a handful of dissidents were excluded from the Big
51 Polley, p. 89. 52 Rosati et al., p. 363.
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Tent: Southern diehards, rural reactionaries, the more…paranoid fringes of radical Right, and the
divided remnants of the old, Marxist, Left.”53 Moreover, Rosati, et al. reports:
Ideological anticommunism became the glue that bound the consensus among liberals, moderates, and conservatives, especially within the elite public. In the words of David Halberstam in The Best and the Brightest, “It was an ideological and bipartisan movement; it enjoyed the support of the press, of the churches, of Hollywood. There was stunningly little debate or sophistication of the levels of anti-communism. It was totally centrist and politically safe; anything else was politically dangerous. These ideological and foreign policy beliefs provided the foundation for the rise of the national security and free market ethos that prevailed in the minds of policy-makers during the Cold War years.54
2.8 THE ANTI-COMMUNIST DEMOCRATS:
Although a general anti-communist consensus existed, according to distinguished political
scientist David Cuate, in The Great Fear: The Anti-Communist Purge Under Truman and
Eisenhower, “in practical terms, in terms of willingness to commit funds, material, even men, to
the new global policy of ‘containing’ Soviet power, the Fair Deal Democrats of the Truman era
easily outstripped their Republican critics.” 55 Likewise, Charles DeBenedetti argues in
“Educators and Armaments in Cold War America”:
Antirevisionist liberals, fearful of a return to a post-World War I pattern of isolationist pacifism, resorted to a militant, interventionist nationalism which they subconsciously pawned off as idealistic internationalism. These War liberals, who previously championed a leftist cause, were now competing with conservatives for leadership in the battle against communism.”56
53 Hodgkin, Godfrey. America in Our Time. New York: Random House, 1978. p. 73. 54 Rosati et al., 365. 55 Caute, David. The Great Fear: The Anti-Communist Purge Under Truman and Eisenhower. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1978. p. 41-45. 56 DeBenedetti, Charles L. “Educators and Armaments in Cold War America.” Peace & Change, Vol. 34, Issue 4, p. 432, 2009. Web. 7 Oct.
2011. .
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To the same end, Rosati, et al. contend that “most liberals became strong advocates of
anti-communism and containment during the late 1940s and 1950s, as Democrats concluded
‘that never again could they afford to expose their foreign policy to the charge that it was soft on
communism.’”57 Nonetheless, Rosati, et al., report that “…conservatism and the political right
were instrumental in pushing society to the right and providing conditions for the establishment
of a liberal-conservative consensus.”58
2.9 THE CONTAINMENT POLICY IN ACTION AND THE FURTHER DEFINING
OF THE